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From: ctheory@lists.uvic.ca
Subject: [CTHEORY] Event Scene 164 - Katrina-Baghdad
Date: August 31, 2005 3:37:55 PM PDT
To: ctheory@lists.uvic.ca
Reply-To: ctheory@lists.uvic.ca
_____________________________________________________________________
CTHEORY THEORY, TECHNOLOGY AND CULTURE VOL 28, NO 3
*** Visit CTHEORY Online: http://www.ctheory.net ***
Event-Scene 164 31/08/2005 Editors: Arthur and Marilouise Kroker
_____________________________________________________________________
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1000 DAYS OF THEORY
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Katrina-Baghdad: Initial Iterations of a Strange Attractor
===========================================================
~Dion Dennis~
On August 30, 2005, George W. Bush was sent to the wrong place, at
the wrong time, to deliver, in his pseudo-folksy ham-handed way, the
wrong script: Bush's political choreographers crafted a speech that
was delivered at a 60th anniversary commemoration of the end of World
War II, held at a California Naval Air station. As a salvo in the
propaganda war over Iraq, Bush histrionically claimed the moral
authority of World War II for the current U.S. occupation of Iraq.
Besides the highly dubious claim of moral equivalence, the timing of
the speech turned out to be inept. Unfolding events caught Bush and
his handlers off-guard.
Fifteen-hundred miles away, a concurrent event, the Category Five
Hurricane Katrina, laid waste to a significant American city, New
Orleans, and to a contiguous two-hundred mile swath of the Gulf Coast
east of New Orleans. Mississippi's Governor, the former head of the
Republican National Committee, Haley Barbour, unreflexively invoked
another descriptive icon of World War II, as well. "It looks like
Hiroshima is what it looks like," muttered a shocked Barbour,
describing parts of a devastated county on the coast. Meanwhile, the
Louisiana levees broke in at least three spots, unleashing the fury
of the swollen waters of Lake Pontchartrain on New Orleans. Potable
drinking water, electricity, and the other taken-for-granted basics
of mundane life disappeared into a twenty foot high stew of sewage,
toxic chemicals, Mississippi Delta mud, and Lake Pontchartrain
spillage. Basic infrastructure was destroyed. Tens of thousands of
houses were severely damaged or simply obliterated. Bloated bodies
floated in the water, as much of the coastal population became a
large and instant group of internal U.S. refugees. Meanwhile, police
looked on passively as looters raided both the upscale downtown shops
such as the Bon Marche, and less status-conscious looters stripped
the shelves of several outlying stores of the behemoth proletarian
vendor, Wal-Mart. On the night of August 30th, the CNN website
described it this way: "New Orleans resembled a war zone more than a
modern American metropolis on Tuesday." As Army Reservists and a
remainder of National Guard troops rolled into New Orleans, they
resembled nothing as much as their comrades-in-arms concurrently
stationed in Iraq. Ironically, the shock and awe produced by
Katrina's Gulf Coast invasion mirrored the effects of the Iraqi war,
in novel and all-too-tragic ways. On Tuesday night, August 30, 2005,
New Orleans became the ~de facto~ American Baghdad, as the contiguous
Gulf Coast east of New Orleans became an analogue for the Iraqi
countryside. It was no surprise, then, to see the juxtaposition of
the following morning's (Wednesday, August 31st) split-screen front
page headlines on MSNBC.com. A story on the "Nightmare" of Katrina
refugees was paired with the "Baghdad Stampede" that killed 800 or
more Iraqis. Panic, disaster, public disorder, the mass movement of
refugees, tightening military occupation, combined with the key
linkages between the disruption of oil production and refineries and
long-term economic dislocation and debt accumulation; these are just
the initial components of Katrina-Baghdad as a "strange attractor."
This emergent strange attractor we now call Katrina-Baghdad will spin
off and/or accelerate a series of complex economic, political and
social iterations over the near and longer term.
Today, there's a post-apocalyptic sensibility in the air. Mayor
Nagin's mandatory evacuation order of New Orleans will be carried
out, in part, by dispatching 475 buses contracted by FEMA (the
Federal Emergency Management Agency) to move tens of thousand of
Katrina refugees from the damaged New Orleans Superdome to the
recently shuttered Houston Astrodome. According to the ~New York
Times~, Texas state government officials expect to house the refugee
residents of this new "Dome City" for months, if not longer.
Meanwhile, as Howard Fineman notes, the bulk of the personnel,
equipment and financial resources necessary for a "war-like" response
to such devastation are sunk into another delta, a half-a-world away,
at the mouth of the Tigris and the Euphrates. Already consuming
eighty percent of the world's lending capital in prolifigate fiscal
and consumer consumption, sharp and immediate rises in oil and
natural gas prices, combined with tens of billions in infrastructural
reconstruction costs, may well set off an accelerating chain of
events (such as rising interest rates and the collapse of the housing
market bubble). The result could lead, in very short order, to a
steep decline in personal and national fortunes.
Finally, we should take note of a particular incident of
destruction. Across Lake Pontchartrain, two seven mile bridge spans
of Interstate 10, connecting New Orleans to the eastern U.S.
mainland, were catastrophically shredded into dozens of disconnected
concrete chunks. As both a metaphor and event precursor, this
particular piece of devastation is profoundly symbolic. The
shattering of this part of I-10 connotes the liabilities of a fragile
and deep interconnectedness, in a global economic and ecological
system. A product of the mid-and-late 20th Century height of the
American Empire, the Interstate Highway System was a triumph of
economic nationalism and Fordist progressive capitalism. Katrina's
demolishing of this portion of I-10 can be understood as signifying
the shattering of the remaining structural supports for the effective
maintenance of such an economic nationalism, while revealing,
immediately and decisively, the hubris and frailty of the Imperium.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
With enduring interests in representation, communication, culture and
technology, Dion Dennis is an Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice
at Bridgewater State College.
_____________________________________________________________________
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